Structural phenomenology
The term structural phenomenology has been used by two different philosophers to denote their respective theoretical approaches:
- Heinrich Rombach deals in his structural phenomenology (which follows on from Edmund Husserl and Martin Heidegger critically ) with “basic phenomena” that underlie being human, but have a life of their own independent of it.
- Herbert Witzenmann calls his epistemological approach, which goes back to Rudolf Steiner's anthroposophy , also structural phenomenology; for him, the term describes a concept that is based on the ongoing development of reality in human consciousness. See: structural phenomenology (Witzenmann)